AICE Literature Command Words, Prose Terms, and Paper Rules

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100 Terms

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25%

Each AO is worth ___ of the overall score on each paper

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AO1

Knowledge (the ability to respond in texts in three main forms (prose, poetry, drama)

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AO2

Understanding (analyze ways in which writers choices of language, form, and structure shape meanings)

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AO3

Personal Response (produce informed independent opinions and interpretations of literary texts)

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A04

Communication (Discuss in a relevant, structured and supported response appropriate to literary studies)

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Drama and Poetry

What does Paper 1 of AICE Literature cover?

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2 Hours, 50%

How much time do you have on the AICE Literature Paper 1 and 2 Exam & how much is it worth?

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The Tempest by Shakespere

What’s the essay topic for the drama essay in paper 1?

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Various Poems

What’s the essay topic for the poetry essay in paper 1?

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Prose and Unseen

What does Paper 2 of AICE Literature cover?

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Short stories by various authors

What’s the essay topic for the prose essay in Paper 2?

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Unseen texts (Poetry, Prose, Drama)

What’s the essay topic for the unknown author’s essay in Paper 2?

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Examine

investigate closely, in detail

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Consider

review and respond to given information

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Contrast

identify/comment on differences

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Describe

state the points of a topic/give characteristics and main features

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Assess

make an informed judgment

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Explain

set out purposes or reasons/make the relationships between things evident/provide why and/or how and support with relevant evidence

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Comment

give an informed opinion

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Demonstrate

show how or give an example

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Analyze

examine in detail to show meaning, identify elements and the relationship between them

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Discuss

write about issues or topics in depth in a structured way

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Suggest

apply knowledge and understanding to situations where there are a range of valid responses in order to make proposals

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Compare

identify/comment on similarities and/or differences

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Develop

take forward to a more advanced stage or build upon given information

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Allegory

a story with two or more levels of meaning – a literal level and a symbolic level – in which events, setting, and characters are symbols for ideas or qualities

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Allusion

the reference to a person, place, or event from history, literature, or religion with which a reader is likely to be familiar

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Analogy

a comparison based on a similarity between things that are otherwise not similar

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Antagonist

the person or force that creates conflict for the main character in a literary work

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Antithesis

the juxtaposition of contrasting ideas, phrases, or words so as to produce an effect or balance

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Characterization

the combination of ways (context, speech, appearance, interactions, or observations) that an author shows readers what a person in a literary selection is like

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Chronological Order

ordering events according to the time at which they happened, with the earliest

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Circularity

the way in which the ending of a text reflects or revisits its opening

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Conflict

the main problem in a literary work

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Connotation

an idea or feeling that a word brings to mind in addition to its primary meaning

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Context

the relationship between a text and its historical, social, and cultural backgrounds

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Dialogue

the way in which the ending of a text reflects or revisits its opening
Conflict – the main problem in a literary work
Connotation – an idea or feeling that a word brings to mind in addition to its primary meaning
Context – the relationship between a text and its historical, social, and cultural backgrounds
Dialogue – the words spoken by characters in a literary work
Diction – the writer’s choice of words, including the vocabulary used, the appropriateness of the words, and the vividness of the language
Dramatic Irony – when the readers know something that the characters do not know
Dynamic Character – a person in a fictional work that changes during the course of the action
Dystopian – a genre where dysfunctional imaginary human societies are presented in the form of alternative futures or histories
Epilogue – a concluding section or speech at the end of a literary work, often serving as a comment on what has happened
Epiphany – describes a character’s moment of discovery, revelation, or realization
Extended Metaphor – a sustained comparison in which a subject is written or spoken of as if it were something else

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Diction

the writer’s choice of words, including the vocabulary used, the appropriateness of the words, and the vividness of the language

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Dramatic Irony

when the readers know something that the characters do not know

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Dynamic Character

a person in a fictional work that changes during the course of the action

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Dystopian

a genre where dysfunctional imaginary human societies are presented in the form of alternative futures or histories

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Epilogue

a concluding section or speech at the end of a literary work, often serving as a comment on what has happened

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Epiphany

describes a character’s moment of discovery, revelation, or realization

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Extended Metaphor

sustained comparison in which a subject is written or spoken of as if it were something else

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External Conflict

when a character has a problem with another character, nature, society, or fate

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First Person Narration

a point of view where the narrator is a character in the story and refers to him or herself using the pronouns “I” and “me”

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Flashback


a scene, a conversation, or an event that interrupts the present action to show something that happened in the past

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Flat character

a person in a fictional work that is never fully developed by the author

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Focalized/Limited Vision Narration

a point of view where the reader sees events through a single character or from a restricted perspective

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Foreshadow

when a writer gives hints, a sign, or a warning that prepares the reader for what is to follow later in the narrative

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Form

the way a text is ordered, presented, or shaped on the page

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Genre

the category or type of literature

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Hyperbole

extreme exaggeration used in a literary work

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Idiom

a phrase in common use that cannot be understood by literal or ordinary meanings

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Imagery

using sensory images to help readers to picture a person, a place, or an event; the use of

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Internal Conflict

when a character has a problem within him or herself

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Interpretation

the explanation of the significance or meaning of a work

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Intertextuality

the way in which a text related or alludes to other texts

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Irony

the contrast between appearance and reality or what is expected and what actually happens

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Metaphor

a direct comparison of two things, in which they are said to be (in some sense) the same thing/have the same characteristics

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Mood

the feeling that an author wants readers to have while reading; created by the author’s use of language

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Motif

an object, image, or idea, used symbolically, that is repeated throughout a text

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Motivation

the wants, needs, or beliefs that cause a character to act or react in a particular way

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Multiple Narration

a point of view where the writer uses two or more narrators in a prose work
Narrator – the person who tells the story

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Narrator

The person who tells the story

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Omniscient Narration

a point of view where the narrator KNOWS EVERYTHING about the characters and events, and describes the characters and action from outside the story

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Onomatopoeia

the use of words that sound like the noises they describe

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Oxymoron

a figure of speech in which something seemingly cannot be, yet it is; a contradiction

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Paradox

a statement that leads to a contradictory situation in which something seems both true and false

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Parody

a humorous imitation of a literary work that exaggerates or distorts the characteristic features of the original

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Personification

a type of figurative language in which human qualities are given to nonhuman things

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Perspective

the point of view from which a story is told

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Plot

the plan or pattern of a series of events that happen in a literary work of fiction, organized in a way that creates interest

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Prologue

a separate, introductory section at the start of a literary or dramatic work

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Protagonist

the main character in a literary work

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Pun

humorous word play that usually is based on several meanings of one word

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Register

the level of formality or informality in language use

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Reliable Narrator

one that can be trusted (because they have the whole picture and/or do not intend to mislead)

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Round Character

a person in a fictional work that is well-developed by the author

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Satire

writing that uses humor to ridicule or criticize individuals, ideas, or institutions in hopes of improving them

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Sensory Details

images help the reader see or hear or feel things. These are details that appeal to the senses

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Setting

the time and place in which a literary work happens

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Sibilant

the characteristic soft or hissing sounds made by the consonants “s,” “sh,” and “z”

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Simile

a comparison of two unlike things using the terms “like” or “as”

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Situational Irony

when something happens that is the opposite of what was expected

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Static Character

a person in a fictional work that does not change during the course of the action

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Stream of Consciousness

a narrative technique that presents the free flow of random thoughts, feelings, and perceptions inside a character’s mind

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Structure

the organization or sequence of ideas, events, or language in a text

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Style

the way an author expresses ideas through the use of kinds of words, literary devices, and sentence structure

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Subplot

a secondary plot in a work of literature that either explains or helps to develop the main plot; the characters and events are connected in some way to the main plot

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Symbol

a person, place, thing, or event that represents something more than itself in a literary work

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Symbolism

the use of objects or ideas that represents something other than themselves

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Theme

the message, usually about life or society, that an author takes toward the audience, the subject, or a character

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Tone

the attitude that an author takes toward the audience, the subject, or a character

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Trope

a recurrent literary device in which something has symbolic or metaphorical significance

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Universal Theme

the central message of a story, poem, novel, or play that many readers can apply to their own experiences, or to those of all people

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Unreliable Narrator

the central message of a story, poem, novel, or play that many readers can apply to their own experiences, or to those of all people

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Verbal Irony

when someone says the opposite of what he or she really means

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Voice

the author’s unique way of communicating of being heard; associated with the basic vision of the writer and reveals the individual quality that makes the author’s writing her own

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